PAEDIA EXPRESS INVITES THE HONORABLE LOUISA HANOUNE ON THE
FUTURE OF ALGERIA.
The News office Desk of the E.N.M.Paedia Express Multimedia
group of Lagos,Nigeria has invited the
Honourable Louisa Hanoune,the First woman to run for the position of the Presidency
in the entire Arab world for a press interview on the future of her nation as
the protests in Algiers continues as at press time.
This medium has already sent her a questionnaire via her faceook
fanpage and expect to hear from the top politician in the days ahead as her nations
heat u.
Louisa Hanoune (Arabic: لويزة حنون) (born 7 April 1954) is the head of Algeria's Workers' Party (Parti des Travailleurs, PT). In 2004,
she became the first woman to run for President of Algeria.
Hanoune was imprisoned by the government several times prior to the legalization of political parties in 1988. She was
jailed soon after she joined the Trotskyist Social
Workers Organisation, an illegal party, in 1981 and again after the 1988 October Riots,
which brought about the end of the National
Liberation Front's (FLN) single-party rule.
During Algeria's civil war of the 1990s, Hanoune was one of the
few opposition voices in parliament,
and, despite her party's laicist values,
a strong opponent of the government's "eradication" policy toward Islamists. In January 1995, she signed the Sant'Egidio Platform together with representatives of other
opposition parties, notably the Islamic Salvation
Front, the radical Islamist party whose dissolution by military
decree brought about the start of the civil war.
EARLY LIFE
Hanoune was born in Chekfa, Jijel Province. Her parents were mountain
peasants from Chekfa, Jijel Province, and she fled with her family
to the city of Annaba, after her parental home was bombed by
the French army during
the Algerian War
of Independence (1954–1962).
She was the first woman of her family to go to school.[1]With Algeria's free and compulsory education
system, Hanoune completed secondary school and went on to obtain her Bachelor's Degree before joining the air transport
sector. Hanoune studied law at the University of Annaba,
a decision which was opposed by her father. She has stated that "It is
this right to education which will completely change the position, the
representation of women in our society and of which I am partly a product."[2]
Workers'
Party[
Subsequent to the riots of 1988,
Algeria adopted a pluralist system in 1989 which made possible for
Hanoune to establish the Workers' Party. The Workers' Party was founded in 1990
by writ of the Socialist Workers Organization. Their main platform concerns the class struggle between the workers or "exploited
classes" and the owners or "oppressors". It is an independent
party which supports the Algerian national movement. Hanoune was the leader and
spokesperson of the party since its inception and was elected Secretary General
of the party in October 2005. In 2007, there were 23 parties contesting
elections in Algeria.[3]
She is known for having denounced the dissolution of the Islamic Salvation
Front, being outspoken in favor of reconciliation and, along with
other parties, signed the Sant'Egidio platform "for a political solution to the
Algerian crisis". During the period of newly independent Algeria, Hanoune
formed her political ideals: "The whole country was still pulsing from the war of liberation,
everybody was talking about socialism, of justice, of progress. Algeria was at
the height of its anti-imperialist battle... we were completely united with the Palestinians, their cause was also ours. We were against apartheid in
South Africa, we talked about Vietnam, I grew up like all my generation in
this militant atmosphere, of struggle".
Hanounes first bid for the
1999 presidential election was rejected by the Constitutional Council.
In the 2004
presidential election she
however became the first female candidate in the entire Arab world to
run for president. Only six candidates were recognized by the constitutional
council.[4]
Hanoune was one of eleven candidates who nominated[5] for
the 2009
presidential election. Her platform included defending the principle
of national sovereignty and denouncing the policy of liberalization and
privatization of public enterprises. She won 4.22% of the vote, coming second
out of six candidates, as President Abdelaziz Bouteflika won a third term with 90.24% of the
votes cast in an election which was denounced as fraudulent.[6]
In the 2014
presidential election, she finished fourth receiving only 1.37% of
the votes. In the party's press conference she accepted the defeat and insisted
that the elections were carried through in a correct way and this time without
any fraud. "Bouteflika has won, people have chosen stability," she
said.[7]
At the international level, Louisa
Hanoune was a founding member of the International Workers and Peoples in
January 1991. She has participated as a representative of PT conferences
against privatization, for the defense of trade union organizations, and
campaigned for workplace standards. She is a committee member of the women
workers and of the Africa Committee of the International Workers. She was
involved with a coalition of unions that spoke out against the war in Iraq,
including the International Confederation of Arab Trade Unions and the
International Confederation of Workers (EIT).
In March 2010, Haroune joined other women's-rights activists in
calling for repeal of Algeria's Family Code on grounds of its failure to
provide adequate protection for females.[8]
In February 2011, she criticised a 12 February anti-Bouteflika
demonstration in Algiers as
social manipulation—"trying to manipulate the social discontent, which is
real, to divert it in the service of imperialism"—and prescribed
a clean break with the European Union, the repeal of all the
concessions made to the World Trade
Organization (WTO),
and [a] return to full economic sovereignty.[9]
She noted that the demonstration had been supported by former
prime minister and International
Monetary Fund/World Bank consultant Ahmed Benbitour. Her editorial message called
on "activists, members and supporters to form popular committees ... to
establish their demands through free discussion, and [press for] exclusively
national, Algerian solutions."
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